King Rinkitink was so much pleased
with the Island of Pingaree that he continued his
stay day after day and week after week, eating good
dinners, talking with King Kitticut and sleeping.
Once in a while he would read from his scroll.
“For,” said he, “whenever I return
home, my subjects will be anxious to know if I have
learned ‘How to be Good,’ and I must not
disappoint them.”
The twenty rowers lived on the small
end of the island, with the pearl fishers, and seemed
not to care whether they ever returned to the Kingdom
of Rinkitink or not. Bilbil the goat wandered
over the grassy slopes, or among the trees, and passed
his days exactly as he pleased. His master seldom
cared to ride him. Bilbil was a rare curiosity
to the islanders, but since there was little pleasure
in talking with the goat they kept away from him.
This pleased the creature, who seemed well satisfied
to be left to his own devices.
Once Prince Inga, wishing to be courteous,
walked up to the goat and said: “Good morning,
Bilbil.”
“It isn’t a good morning,”
answered Bilbil grumpily. “It is cloudy
and damp, and looks like rain.”
“I hope you are contented in
our kingdom,” continued the boy, politely ignoring
the other’s harsh words.
“I’m not,” said
Bilbil. “I’m never contented; so it
doesn’t matter to me whether I’m in your
kingdom or in some other kingdom. Go away will
you?”
“Certainly,” answered
the Prince, and after this rebuff he did not again
try to make friends with Bilbil.
Now that the King, his father, was
so much occupied with his royal guest, Inga was often
left to amuse himself, for a boy could not be allowed
to take part in the conversation of two great monarchs.
He devoted himself to his studies, therefore, and
day after day he climbed into the branches of his
favorite tree and sat for hours in his “tree-top
rest,” reading his father’s precious manuscripts
and thinking upon what he read.
You must not think that Inga was a
molly-coddle or a prig, because he was so solemn and
studious. Being a King’s son and heir to
a throne, he could not play with the other boys of
Pingaree, and he lived so much in the society of the
King and Queen, and was so surrounded by the pomp
and dignity of a court, that he missed all the jolly
times that boys usually have. I have no doubt
that had he been able to live as other boys do, he
would have been much like other boys; as it was, he
was subdued by his surroundings, and more grave and
thoughtful than one of his years should be.
Inga was in his tree one morning when,
without warning, a great fog enveloped the Island
of Pingaree. The boy could scarcely see the tree
next to that in which he sat, but the leaves above
him prevented the dampness from wetting him, so he
curled himself up in his seat and fell fast asleep.
All that forenoon the fog continued.
King Kitticut, who sat in his palace talking with
his merry visitor, ordered the candles lighted, that
they might be able to see one another. The good
Queen, Inga’s mother, found it was too dark
to work at her embroidery, so she called her maidens
together and told them wonderful stories of bygone
days, in order to pass away the dreary hours.
But soon after noon the weather changed.
The dense fog rolled away like a heavy cloud and suddenly
the sun shot his bright rays over the island.
“Very good!” exclaimed
King Kitticut. “We shall have a pleasant
afternoon, I am sure,” and he blew out the candles.
Then he stood a moment motionless,
as if turned to stone, for a terrible cry from without
the palace reached his ears a cry so full
of fear and horror that the King’s heart almost
stopped beating. Immediately there was a scurrying
of feet as every one in the palace, filled with dismay,
rushed outside to see what had happened. Even
fat little Rinkitink sprang from his chair and followed
his host and the others through the arched vestibule.
After many years the worst fears of
King Kitticut were realized.
Landing upon the beach, which was
but a few steps from the palace itself, were hundreds
of boats, every one filled with a throng of fierce
warriors. They sprang upon the land with wild
shouts of defiance and rushed to the King’s
palace, waving aloft their swords and spears and battleaxes.
King Kitticut, so completely surprised
that he was bewildered, gazed at the approaching host
with terror and grief.
“They are the men of Regos and
Coregos!” he groaned. “We are, indeed,
lost!”
Then he bethought himself, for the
first time, of his wonderful pearls. Turning
quickly, he ran back into the palace and hastened to
the hall where the treasures were hidden. But
the leader of the warriors had seen the King enter
the palace and bounded after him, thinking he meant
to escape. Just as the King had stooped to press
the secret spring in the tiles, the warrior seized
him from the rear and threw him backward upon the
floor, at the same time shouting to his men to fetch
ropes and bind the prisoner. This they did very
quickly and King Kitticut soon found himself helplessly
bound and in the power of his enemies. In this
sad condition he was lifted by the warriors and carried
outside, when the good King looked upon a sorry sight.
The Queen and her maidens, the officers
and servants of the royal household and all who had
inhabited this end of the Island of Pingaree had been
seized by the invaders and bound with ropes. At
once they began carrying their victims to the boats,
tossing them in as unceremoniously as if they had
been bales of merchandise.
The King looked around for his son
Inga, but failed to find the boy among the prisoners.
Nor was the fat King, Rinkitink, to be seen anywhere
about.
The warriors were swarming over the
palace like bees in a hive, seeking anyone who might
be in hiding, and after the search had been prolonged
for some time the leader asked impatiently: “Do
you find anyone else?”
“No,” his men told him. “We
have captured them all.”
“Then,” commanded the
leader, “remove everything of value from the
palace and tear down its walls and towers, so that
not one stone remains upon another!”
While the warriors were busy with
this task we will return to the boy Prince, who, when
the fog lifted and the sun came out, wakened from his
sleep and began to climb down from his perch in the
tree. But the terrifying cries of the people,
mingled with the shouts of the rude warriors, caused
him to pause and listen eagerly.
Then he climbed rapidly up the tree,
far above his platform, to the topmost swaying branches.
This tree, which Inga called his own, was somewhat
taller than the other trees that surrounded it, and
when he had reached the top he pressed aside the leaves
and saw a great fleet of boats upon the shore strange
boats, with banners that he had never seen before.
Turning to look upon his father’s palace, he
found it surrounded by a horde of enemies. Then
Inga knew the truth: that tile island had been
invaded by the barbaric warriors from the north.
He grew so faint from the terror of it all that he
might have fallen had he not wound his arms around
a limb and clung fast until the dizzy feeling passed
away. Then with his sash he bound himself to the
limb and again ventured to look out through the leaves.
The warriors were now engaged in carrying
King Kitticut and Queen Garee and all their other
captives down to the boats, where they were thrown
in and chained one to another. It was a dreadful
sight for the Prince to witness, but he sat very still,
concealed from the sight of anyone below by the bower
of leafy branches around him. Inga knew very well
that he could do nothing to help his beloved parents,
and that if he came down he would only be forced to
share their cruel fate.
Now a procession of the Northmen passed
between the boats and the palace, bearing the rich
furniture, splendid draperies and rare ornaments of
which the royal palace had been robbed, together with
such food and other plunder as they could lay their
hands upon. After this, the men of Regos and
Coregos threw ropes around the marble domes and towers
and hundreds of warriors tugged at these ropes until
the domes and towers toppled and fell in ruins upon
the ground. Then the walls themselves were torn
down, till little remained of the beautiful palace
but a vast heap of white marble blocks tumbled and
scattered upon the ground.
Prince Inga wept bitter tears of grief
as he watched the ruin of his home; yet he was powerless
to avert the destruction. When the palace had
been demolished, some of the warriors entered their
boats and rowed along the coast of the island, while
the others marched in a great body down the length
of the island itself. They were so numerous that
they formed a line stretching from shore to shore
and they destroyed every house they came to and took
every inhabitant prisoner.
The pearl fishers who lived at the
lower end of the island tried to escape in their boats,
but they were soon overtaken and made prisoners, like
the others. Nor was there any attempt to resist
the foe, for the sharp spears and pikes and swords
of the invaders terrified the hearts of the defenseless
people of Pingaree, whose sole weapons were their
oyster rakes.
When night fell the whole of the Island
of Pingaree had been conquered by the men of the North,
and all its people were slaves of the conquerors.
Next morning the men of Regos and Coregos, being capable
of no further mischief, departed from the scene of
their triumph, carrying their prisoners with them
and taking also every boat to be found upon the island.
Many of the boats they had filled with rich plunder,
with pearls and silks and velvets, with silver and
gold ornaments and all the treasure that had made
Pingaree famed as one of the richest kingdoms in the
world. And the hundreds of slaves they had captured
would be set to work in the mines of Regos and the
grain fields of Coregos.
So complete was the victory of the
Northmen that it is no wonder the warriors sang songs
of triumph as they hastened back to their homes.
Great rewards were awaiting them when they showed the
haughty King of Regos and the terrible Queen of Coregos
the results of their ocean raid and conquest.